s10xtremist
Well-known member
After dealing with sketchy and deadbeat concrete contractors for 3 months, I'm (finally!) putting my shop together. I generally hold VERY tight tolerances when building or making things, especially when following engineered instructions. But, this building is kicking my **** in that aspect.
It's a 30x40x12 with 2:12 pitch and light end walls. The slab measured out to be very square, at least within my acceptable allowances (may have been 1/4" longer on one of the diagonal measurements). Measuring from the center of the 4" wide center beam to the back corners, the dimensions are spot-on 20'. Measuring from the center of the center beam to the front corners, one side is 1/4" short, the other is 1/4" long. I know I can elongate the holes in the corner uprights and shift them as needed, but is it really necessary for that 1/4"?
Also, I'm having a hard time getting all 6 uprights to be plumb. I have severe OCD when it comes to getting that bubble dead-centered between the lines instead of "just between the lines". The 3 uprights on the north wall need to lean one way, and the 3 on the south wall need to lean the other. We roped it to my neighbor's Ranger and pulled them to be very close, then tightened all the girt bolts and footing anchors, but it still moved back a little to where the bubble is approximately 15% past the line.
Is this something that can be "close enough", at least to my description, and I just over thinking all of this? Anyone have any tips/tricks to share?
It's a 30x40x12 with 2:12 pitch and light end walls. The slab measured out to be very square, at least within my acceptable allowances (may have been 1/4" longer on one of the diagonal measurements). Measuring from the center of the 4" wide center beam to the back corners, the dimensions are spot-on 20'. Measuring from the center of the center beam to the front corners, one side is 1/4" short, the other is 1/4" long. I know I can elongate the holes in the corner uprights and shift them as needed, but is it really necessary for that 1/4"?
Also, I'm having a hard time getting all 6 uprights to be plumb. I have severe OCD when it comes to getting that bubble dead-centered between the lines instead of "just between the lines". The 3 uprights on the north wall need to lean one way, and the 3 on the south wall need to lean the other. We roped it to my neighbor's Ranger and pulled them to be very close, then tightened all the girt bolts and footing anchors, but it still moved back a little to where the bubble is approximately 15% past the line.
Is this something that can be "close enough", at least to my description, and I just over thinking all of this? Anyone have any tips/tricks to share?
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Ain't that a fact!